White Wolves: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|British neo-Nazi terrorist organization}} |
{{Short description|British neo-Nazi terrorist organization}} |
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{{about|the British group|the South African |
{{about|the British group|the alleged South African white supremacist group|Strijdom Square massacre|other uses|White Wolf (disambiguation)}} |
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{{Use British English|date=May 2013}} |
{{Use British English|date=May 2013}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2023}} |
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2023}} |
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Around the time of the Brixton nail-bomb, 25 people received stenciled notes stating: |
Around the time of the Brixton nail-bomb, 25 people received stenciled notes stating: |
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{{quote|''Notice is hereby given that all non-whites (defined by blood, not religion) must permanently leave the British Isles before the year is out. Jews & other non-whites who remain after 1999 has ended will be exterminated. When the clocks strike midnight on |
{{quote|''Notice is hereby given that all non-whites (defined by blood, not religion) must permanently leave the British Isles before the year is out. Jews & other non-whites who remain after 1999 has ended will be exterminated. When the clocks strike midnight on 31 December 1999 the White Wolves will begin to howl and when the Wolves begin to howl the Wolves begin to hunt. You have been warned. Hail Britannia.''<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/328181.stm "Racist 'Wolves' emerge from shadows"] BBC. 25 April 1999. BBC</ref>}} |
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At the time of the bombings, police authorities believed that former Combat 18 second-in-command Del O'Connor was the likely head of the White Wolves.<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/uk/1999/apr/28/uksecurity.stuartmillar Anti-terror police seek White Wolf racist over bombs] 28 April 1999. ''The Guardian'' (UK)</ref> A stencilled message had been circulated reading ''C18 did not carry out the Brixton bombing. We, the White Wolves, did.''<ref name="indp">Burrell, Ian (28 April 1999) [https://www.independent.co.uk/news/police-seek-leader-of-neonazi-gang-1090058.html "Police seek leader of neo-Nazi gang"], ''The Independent''.</ref> |
At the time of the bombings, police authorities believed that former Combat 18 second-in-command Del O'Connor was the likely head of the White Wolves.<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/uk/1999/apr/28/uksecurity.stuartmillar Anti-terror police seek White Wolf racist over bombs] 28 April 1999. ''The Guardian'' (UK)</ref> A stencilled message had been circulated reading ''C18 did not carry out the Brixton bombing. We, the White Wolves, did.''<ref name="indp">Burrell, Ian (28 April 1999) [https://www.independent.co.uk/news/police-seek-leader-of-neonazi-gang-1090058.html "Police seek leader of neo-Nazi gang"], ''The Independent''.</ref> |
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[[Category:1999 in London]] |
[[Category:1999 in London]] |
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[[Category:Neo-Nazi organisations in the United Kingdom]] |
[[Category:Neo-Nazi organisations in the United Kingdom]] |
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[[Category:Organisations that oppose |
[[Category:Organisations that oppose LGBTQ rights in the United Kingdom]] |
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[[Category:Racially motivated violence in England]] |
[[Category:Racially motivated violence in England]] |
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[[Category:Terrorist incidents in London]] |
[[Category:Terrorist incidents in London]] |
Latest revision as of 19:40, 6 October 2024
The White Wolves was a British neo-Nazi and white supremacist terrorist organisation that claimed to adhere to the doctrine of leaderless resistance,[1] which claimed responsibility for several racially motivated bombings in London in 1999.
"The White Wolves is a tiny secretive group of nazi fanatics organised in cells. It first came to attention in 1994 when it issued a 'blueprint for terror' in which it set out the events now being played out in London. Copying the concept of "leaderless resistance" from American far-right extremists, they formed small cells and planned terror bombings and cold- blooded murder."[2] The anonymous 15 page 1994 blueprint for terror – which announced the formation of the White Wolves, contained practical instructions on bomb making, and which called for a race war[3] – has been widely attributed to the then neo-nazi ideologue David Myatt.[4]
Mike Whine, head of the Board of Jewish Deputies theorised that the White Wolves were a splinter group of Combat 18, deriving their name from a Serbian paramilitary formation.[citation needed]
London bombs
[edit]Around the time of the Brixton nail-bomb, 25 people received stenciled notes stating:
Notice is hereby given that all non-whites (defined by blood, not religion) must permanently leave the British Isles before the year is out. Jews & other non-whites who remain after 1999 has ended will be exterminated. When the clocks strike midnight on 31 December 1999 the White Wolves will begin to howl and when the Wolves begin to howl the Wolves begin to hunt. You have been warned. Hail Britannia.[5]
At the time of the bombings, police authorities believed that former Combat 18 second-in-command Del O'Connor was the likely head of the White Wolves.[6] A stencilled message had been circulated reading C18 did not carry out the Brixton bombing. We, the White Wolves, did.[7]
Arrest
[edit]In May 1999, a 22-year-old, David Copeland, was arrested and charged with all three nail-bombings.[8]
References
[edit]- ^ Nadine Gurr; Benjamin Cole (2000). The new face of terrorism: threats from weapons of mass destruction. I.B. Tauris. p. 191. ISBN 978-1-86064-460-3.
- ^ Sunday Mirror, 2 May 1999, page 4
- ^ https://www.newsweek.com/hatred-london-166706 Susan Greenberg, Newsweek", 5 September 1999
- ^ Searchlight, July 2000
- ^ "Racist 'Wolves' emerge from shadows" BBC. 25 April 1999. BBC
- ^ Anti-terror police seek White Wolf racist over bombs 28 April 1999. The Guardian (UK)
- ^ Burrell, Ian (28 April 1999) "Police seek leader of neo-Nazi gang", The Independent.
- ^ London nail-bomber arrested—What shapes the psychology of hate? 4 May 1999. World Socialist Web Site.